ORIGINAL PRAGUE SYNCOPATED ORCHESTRA / LA VELLE und GUY LAFITTE QUARTET / FRANKFURT SWING ALL STARS feat. CLAUDE WILLIAMS / AL COPLEY DUO / ROBERT LOCKWOOD JR. / MAXINE HOWARD and HER RHYTHM & BLUES EXPLOSION
Jazzwoche Burghausen 1988
Год выпуска: 1988
Жанр: Swing / Jazz / Blues
Продолжительность: 01:27:33
MUSICIANS:
Original Prague Syncopated Orchestra
La Velle und Guy Lafitte Quartet:
LA VELLE - voc
GUY LAFITTE - ts
MARC MEMMLER - p
PIERRE BOUSSAGUET - b
AL LEVILL - dr
Frankfurt Swing All Stars feat. Claude Williams:
CLAUDE WILLIAMS - violin
CONNY JACKEL - tp
GUSTL MAYER - ts
FRITZ MARTSCHUH - vib
BERND K. OTTO - g
BILLY BÜHLER - b
ATA BERK - dr
Al Copley Duo:
AL COPLEY - p
GEORGE GREEN - dr
ROBERT LOCKWOOD JR. - voc, g
Maxine Howard and her Rhythm and Blues Explosion:
MAXINE HOWARD - voc
TITUS WILLIAMS - g
PETER PRZYSTANIAK - p
RALPH MILLER - b
HERMANN KOCK - dr
Track List:
Original Prague Syncopated Orchestra - Hard To Get Girty / I Wonder What's Become of Joe / You're Driving Me Crazy / When I Take My Sugar to Tea
La Velle und Guy Lafitte Quartet - When I Fall In Love / Going to Chicago
Frankfurt Swing All Stars feat. Claude Williams - Oh Baby / Blue and Sentimental / Flying Home
Al Copley Duo - Ooh Wow / I Didn't Want To Do It / I've got a Girl
Robert Lockwood Jr. - C.C.Rider / Rambling on My Mind / I'm Going Up And Down
Maxine Howard and her Rhythm and Blues Explosion - Rock Me Baby / Little Red Rooster / Kansas City
Доп. информация:
19. Internationale Jazzwoche Burghausen 1988, Germany
... материал данного релиза составлен из выступлений шести коллективов ...
... понятно, что это лишь фрагменты из их выступлений на фестивале Burghausen 1988
ORIGINAL PRAGUE SYNCOPATED ORCHESTRA Official Site
GUY LAFITTE from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
AL COPLEY Official Site
AL COPLEY from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
ROBERT LOCKWOOD JR. Official Site
ROBERT LOCKWOOD JR. from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
... выступление Original Prague Syncopated Orchestra - можно посмотреть здесь ...
Качество: SATRip
Формат: DVD Video • menu (потрековая разбивка присутствует)
Видео кодек: MPEG2
Аудио кодек: AC3
Видео: PAL 720x576 (4:3) VBR 25.00fps, Averabe Bitrate (est.): 4934 Kb/s
Аудио: Dolby AC3 48000Hz 224Kbps
Источник: Digital Satellite > SkyStar2 > raw data to HDD > TMPGEnc DVD Author > VIDEO_TS
DVD Text Information
Title: _____
Size: 3.10 Gb ( 3 254 966 KBytes ) - DVD-5
Enabled regions: 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8
VTS_01 :
Play Length: 01:27:33
Video: PAL 4:3 (720x576) VBR
Audio:
Not specified (Dolby AC3, 2 ch)
... info - GUY LAFITTE
A fine swing tenorman whose main inspiration was always Coleman Hawkins, Guy Lafitte appeared in many mainstream settings through the years. LaFitte started out paying clarinet including with swing-oriented gypsy bands. After switching to tenor in 1947 and moving to Paris, he worked with Big Bill Broonzy (1950), Mezz Mezzrow (1951), Bill Coleman (off and on starting in 1952), Dicky Wells and Buck Clayton. Through the years, Lafitte has frequently led his own mainstream combos and was also often utilized by veteran American players who were visiting France including Lionel Hampton (1956), Duke Ellington (for the 1961 film Paris Blues), Milt Buckner, Wallace Davenport, Arnett Cobb and Wild Bill Davis. As a leader, Guy Lafitte led many sessions during the 1954-93 period (particularly 1954-64) including for CFD, Duc-Thomson, Pathe, French Columbia, VSM, French RCA, Vega, Black & Blue and CTPL.
Scott Yanow ~ AMG
... info - AL COPLEY
Blues pianist and singer Al Copley was born in 1952 in Buffalo, NY. Although his family moved several times while Copley was a youngster (first to San Francisco, CA, then Westerly, RI), he was able to take piano lessons on a regular basis. Inspired by the boogie-woogie style of playing, Copley formed his first band in 1965, Ponce de Leon & the Young Ones, before forming Roomful of Blues three years later. Copley spent the early '70s attending the Berklee School of Music in Boston, while still playing with Roomful of Blues. The group began issuing albums in the later part of the decade, as Copley could be heard on such releases as 1977's self-titled debut, 1979'sLet's Have a Party, 1981's Hot Little Mama, and 1984's Dressed Up to Get Messed Up. But it was also in 1984 that Copley left the group to move to Europe. The move led to numerous appearances at jazz and blues festivals, as Copley embarked on a solo career later in the decade that resulted in such releases as 1986's A Handful of Key and 1989's Automatic Overdrive.
Although there was a brief Roomful of Blues reunion around this time, Copley returned back to solo work, which led to Copley joining guitarist Jimmie Vaughan for a series of highly prestigious gigs at Royal Albert Hall in England opening for Eric Clapton. Copley would strike up a friendship with Clapton, which led to Copley himself opening several shows for him in 1997. Throughout the '90s, Copley issued solo releases (including Good Understanding, Live at Montreaux, and his swinging pairing with Hal Singer Blue Paris Nights), while also forming the seven-piece outfit Al Copley's Prophet Motive in 1999. In addition to his recording with Roomful of Bluesand as a solo artist, Copley has guested on other artist's albums, including releases by the Fabulous Thunderbirds, Eddie C. Campbell, and Duke Robillard, among others. 2000 marked the release of his ninth record, Rainy Summer on One Mind records.
Greg Prato ~ AMG
... info - ROBERT LOCKWOOD, JR.
Robert Lockwood, Jr., learned his blues firsthand from an unimpeachable source: the immortal Robert Johnson. Lockwood was capable of conjuring up the bone-chilling Johnson sound whenever he desired, but he was never one to linger in the past for long – which accounts for the jazzy swing he often brought to the licks he played on his 12-string electric guitar.
Born in 1915, Lockwood was one of the last living links to the glorious Johnson legacy. When Lockwood's mother became romantically involved with the charismatic rambler in Helena, AR, the quiet teenager suddenly gained a role model and a close friend – so close that Lockwood considered himself Johnson's stepson. Robert Jr. learned how to play guitar very quickly with Johnson's expert help, assimilating Johnson's technique inside and out.
Following Johnson's tragic murder in 1938, Lockwood embarked on his own intriguing musical journey. He was among the first bluesmen to score an electric guitar in 1938 and eventually made his way to Chicago, where he cut four seminal tracks for Bluebird. Jazz elements steadily crept into Lockwood's dazzling fretwork, although his role as Sonny Boy Williamson's musical partner on the fabled KFFA King Biscuit Time radio broadcasts during the early '40s out of Helena, AR, probably didn't emphasize that side of his dexterity all that much.
Settling in Chicago in 1950, Lockwood swiftly gained a reputation as a versatile in-demand studio sideman, recording behind harp genius Little Walter, piano masters Sunnyland Slim and Eddie Boyd, and plenty more. Solo recording opportunities were scarce, though Lockwood did cut fine singles in 1951 for Mercury ("I'm Gonna Dig Myself a Hole" and a very early "Dust My Broom") and in 1955 for JOB ("Sweet Woman from Maine"/"Aw Aw Baby").
Lockwood's best modern work as a leader was done for Pete Lowry's Trix label, including some startling workouts on the 12-string axe (which he daringly added to his arsenal in 1965). He later joined forces with fellow Johnson disciple Johnny Shines for two eclectic early-'80s Rounder albums. He also recorded a Robert Johnsontribute album and founded his own label, Lockwood. In 1998, he signed to Verve for the Grammy-nominated album I Got to Find Me a Woman, which featured sit-in guests including B.B. King and Joe Louis Walker. He was still working a weekly gig in Cleveland until early November 2006, when he suffered a brain aneurysm. He died on November 21.
Bill Dahl ~ AMG
Релизы с участием LA VELLE
poster JAZZWOCHE BURGHAUSEN 1988
Релизы JAZZWOCHE BURGHAUSEN